DAILY CROSS WORD PUZZLE i z ~ 3 A H|j S 6 7 a “ _ ? ppis T'~ ” 20 IP zf* Up: 24 25 26 ZZP H - 35 M % ■— 7777; 99999 - ■■ 37 » 40 iL il _ 4i -43 44 45 ” J YMM 111 59 ACROSS 28— Conjunction 29 — Because 30— Fourth note of the scale 31— For example (abbr.) 32 A stableman 34—Examina tions (colloq.) 36 Period of time 37 Prone 38— A fairy 40 — Soon 41— Male parent 43 —Petroleum 45 Form of en before 1 46 A rascal 47 Ties with a cord I— Stains s— Clutch 10— Old form of the 11 — From the in doors 13— On the lee 14— Snatch away 16— An imple ment used for washing floors 18— Distance made by a vessel in one • tack - 19— An entrance 21— Jots 23—Low 25— Affirmative vote (vari- - ant) 27—Letter N DOWN 8— Beholds 9 Small, point ed piece of wood 12 —Labor 15—A storage crib 17—Post Office 1— Nicknames 2 Made of lead 3 Sign of the infinitive mode 4An amount 6 Sun god 7 Calm. Copr. 1938, King Features Syndicate, Inc. BARCLAY ON BRIDGE UNNECESSARY NEWS HUNDREDS, yes many thou sands of players, have a tendency nowadays to overdo the matter of showing a new suit after their partners open the bidding. That is all very well and good if the part ner had started with a minor suit or no trump. But if he bid a major suit and you hold four cards of it, telling him about another suit is usually news more valuable to the opponents in the later play than to your partner in the bidding. Raise him, as a rule, to the justi fiable height when you have four of his suit, unless, perhaps, you have stoppers in all other suits and so like no trump. 496 3 2 V 10 8 A 10 9 8 *A Q 9 ♦ A 8 Ml ♦J 5 *K J 7S f 6 4 3 2 ♦J 43 S *** 4K 5 2 4 J 10 8 7 S. 46 4 3 2 4 K Q 10 7 4 4A Q 9 4Q 7 6 4 K 5 (Dealer: South. Both sides vul nerable.) When South bid 1-Spade on this deal and North responded with 2- Diamonds, South was uncertain as to just what his next best response was He hated to jump the bid in spades because ‘he suit was not too solid and thought 2-Spades or 2-No Trumps too weak He there fore decided on 3-No Trumps. Physician Gives Reasons Par Testing With Tuberculin Bv LOGAN CLENDENING. ftl. D. PARENTS, with children in school almost everywhere nowa days. have to decide whether they w & approve of having the children tested with tuberculin. Possible objections rnay fall un der three heads: (1) It may be harmful. •’2) What good will it do? (3) The parents may dread that they will be informed of the existence of tuberculosis. 'Two of these we may dispose of immediately. Tuberculin testing, a s done by modern methods, does no harm either to the normal child or to the one with incipient tuber culosis. The third objection—the dread °f discovery of the disease—h, one °f those peculiar pieces of psychol ogy that tuberculosis workers have cad to deal with since time imme morial. The only thing that cold mgical reason can do to combat it I s to say that the disease is curable 111 the early stages, the tuberculin test helps to detect it in the earlier Dr, Clendening will answer Questions of general interest ouly, and then only through his column. j'tages. ana if you let it go to the cr stages it is much more diffi , tto cure. Besides, so far as the read knowledge goes, when the v/f ase , devel °ps to the later stages }ou will know anyway. tir^° VV L. as t 0 the remaining ques of ~v ,hich concerns the rationale aic! ll!e Procedure as a diagnostic tuberculin test was intro oeu Koch, who was the dis beromr 0f the casual & erm of tu thst; L OSIS - He found by accident l_ u r|Ht" k R|Mvle| & o r 21—E. When North then went to 4-No Trumps, South felt that North must have a very strong hand, so bid 5-Diamonds to show some sort of a fit there and put the problem up to North. When North’s next bid was 5-Spades, South went to 5-No Trumps and North to six. The club J was opened and won with the K. The spade A was driven out and a diamond had to be given up later, so that the con tract was down one. The whole trouble came fnom North’s bad bid of 2-Diamonds, when holding four trumps. His correct bid was 2-Spades and then South would have bid 4-Spades or perhaps chance 3-No Trumps if he felt like shooting. If North should then feel like inviting slam with 4-No Trumps, South should sign off at 5-Spades. 4 • * Tomorrow’s Problem 49 6 974 3 2 4 A 7 4Q9762 4 A Q 2 410 8754 49 8 5 . 4A 10 4QJ9 B>* Ul 462 4 3 c *A 8 53 4,10 i — l 4K J 3 4KQ J 6 4 K 10 5 *K J 4 (Dealer: South. East-West vul nerable ) What is the correct defense against South’s 3-No Trump con tract after the lead of the dia mond Q? amount of tuberculin, a spot of red- * ness will develop at the site of the injection. This is all there is to the tuber culin tost, but the interpretation of it Is complicated. Anyone who has ever had tuberculosis reacts. And as over half the population has had tuberculosis at some time, and most of then have healed spontaneously, the question arises, in the presence of a positive tuberculin test, of whether the case is active or not. Actual results in the Chadwick clinic on 50,000 high school stu dents showed that about half of them reacted. When these were segregated and examined by X-ray and other methods, it was found that one out of twenty had an act ive case. Most of these were in an early stage, so cure was possible, and this justifies the advice that the tuberculin test is valuable procedure. QUESTIONS FROM READERS R. G. A.: “I heard that hydro chloric acid xyas good to cure jaundice. Please tell how much and how often to take it.” Answer: There is a mistake here. Hydrochloric acid is not used for jaundice. It IS used in pernicious anemia in which the skin has a yellow color something like jaundice, but such a differen tiation should be made by a doctor. In pernicious anemia other treat ment to supplement the hydro chloric acid is advisable. EDITOR'S NOTE: Seven pamphlet* say Dr. Clendening can now be ob tained by sending 10 cents in coin, for each, and a self-addressed en velope stamped with a three-cent stamp, to Dr. Logan Clendening, in care of this paper. The pamphlets are: "Three Weeks’ Reducing Diet", “Indigestion and Constipation". "Re ducing and Gaining", "Infant Feed ing”, "Instructions for the Treatment of Diabetes”, "Feminine Hygiene" and “The Care of the Hair and Skin”. THIMBLE 1 HEATRE Starring FOPEYfc Friends, Demonians, Countrymen By E. C. Sega*' 1 f HOW LONS VJILLTH&V KEEPj [KING KWOW WONDERFUL! /1 DON'T KKIOVJ VJHATAI ( OH,THAT ROYAL MB , /^J' i Jl , WI4GQ6,BOOSO CABOOSOjMAVBEHEHAS VITIS, BUT 1 YAM J (SCOUNDREL.KINC Warn >F> SEW J FORGIVEN OS followin' \ Acabooso!-- he MFufn^En^ G ONLV SHOT THAT OS A AT LAST! \JNSTBOKTIONSy #%-, SENT US A !£-? ISTER , • by LES FORGRAV' mmNS % NNVAES3E? AMO VJVTVAOOT OOP. CAR. AND \X'S A. CIMCM, MvJE you CAM'T Cl-V 0 J -CO J - SOOMTR.V -iO RIGHT HERE ' TREES ON TvAAT LOT TO \WI BE ^ —-» nay house? it’-s wv lot aho ggS| rHE OLD HOME TOWN ««*=■««<».**'«*<>«*• By STANLEY aNOTHJAS&V OTEX SHE JUST LP ME I W/,3 ' WEAK ANP OFA S_ TIRING - - WAS SHY J— \ ip slow to act and i believed) ERY TH /NG» I WAS TolP - SOI ;t waNtep to show i ——— J ' ‘ AUNT SARAH PEABOPY^VVEAJT "THROUGH ONE OF THE pV Wv ' CARNIVAL ATTRACTIONS j COPYRIGHT. I9j>, KINC FEATURES SYNDICATE, Ine. rTA KETT ■ PAUL ROBINSOb FITA WILL YOU STAY S jlf FEELS ISO YOUfcE THE NWAT 1 HlßEfr THUAiS TO-eeR- J ANDY YOU - BUY W& ‘SOON F=OUND {_) DVD YOU ’ UAV YOU UP FOQAWUVUE- *~\AD COMPLETE 1 OUT YOU VMEttE TOO CLEVER H ’YHBY KHEWANDV ML HENDERSON, CN. C.) DAILY DISPATCH FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1935 scon s SCRAP BOOK • By R.J. SCOTT M l 5 HAS BEEK ICEBERG IK KOTVfU Av